The attack recycled through the back line and ca around again.
Lloyd Angelo received Mateo's layoff, turned unhurriedly, and clipped the ball out to Sitney Parker on the left. Parker had space. He pushed forward along the touchline, drew a B Team winger across, and the attack shifted wide. Thirty seconds of slow build before the shape reset.
On the sideline, Old Jes watched and breathed and watched so more.
He'd sold Daniel on this kid based on one mont, a single curling outside-of-foot ball at Dortmund that had drawn a perfect arc over two defensive lines and landed at a winger's feet. The kind of pass that usually only existed in highlights packages. He'd told himself it wasn't a fluke. He'd built a small, quiet case for it in his head on the drive over. And then, first touch of the session, Mateo had let the ball roll two tres past his foot and nearly given possession straight to the opposition.
Not a fluke, Old Jes told himself again, with slightly less conviction.
The ga continued. Ben Kehi was carrying the attacking load himself now, recognising that his new midfield partner had no idea where to stand without the ball. Mateo followed runs, arrived half a beat late, found himself in the wrong channel repeatedly. He wasn't reading the shape. The positional vocabulary of a central midfielder - when to stay, when to arrive, how to make yourself available without disrupting the structure was simply absent.
Three minutes in, Ben Kehi had essentially written him off as a passing option and was running on his own instincts. The trial, by any conventional asure, was going badly.
Then the passing overlay shifted.
Mateo had been circling toward the right, trying to find a useful angle, when the lines in front of him changed. Not just the positions, the values on each route updated as he moved, recalculating, adjusting. He stopped and took a step back, and the numbers changed again. He moved diagonally and watched a lane that had been pale green darken toward amber.
It was mapping the threat levels in real ti. Not just telling him where teammates were, telling him where they would be, based on their current montum. The geotry of the pass wasn't just about now; it was accounting for what would happen next.
That's how it works, he realised. Follow the red.
At that mont Ben Kehi received a square ball from the left winger and checked his options. He was intending to loft it into the box, high ball, try his luck. He'd stopped looking for Mateo entirely.
"Ball!" Mateo called out. Sharp, clear, no hesitation.
Ben Kehi turned his head, found Mateo standing ten tres behind and to his left, hand up. He hadn't been planning to pass that direction. But this was, at its core, an audition for the new kid, and if the kid was calling for it, you gave it to him.
He rolled it back with his left foot.
Daniel watched from the touchline. A kid calling for the ball he shouldn't, in a position he didn't understand, with a B Team midfielder closing him down from six tres. Brave, or stupid, he wasn't sure yet. He'd seen enough of both in his five years with the youth team.
The ball reached Mateo's feet.
The B Team's defensive midfielder arrived at the sa instant, right foot extended to cut across the pass.
In Mateo's vision, the entire passing overlay had simplified. Almost everything had gone dark - white, pale, no viable option forward. Except one line, running low and diagonal through a gap that didn't look like a gap: between the charging midfielder and the angle of the two B Team centre-backs standing seven tres behind him. The number on it read: 79%.
Not a shot. A delivery.
Mateo struck the ball with the outside of his right boot. The contact felt soft - almost too soft, barely a snap of the ankle and the ball rolled away in a direction that made no imdiate sense. It was headed toward the charging midfielder's left hip. From the sideline it looked, straightforwardly, like a miscued shot.
Daniel turned to look at Old Jes. Old Jes's face had already collapsed into sothing that resembled pre-emptive embarrassnt.
Then the ball went through Beasley's legs.
Not between his legs in the sense of a deliberate nutg, more that the ball's trajectory had been precisely calculated to pass through the corridor that Beasley's own charging stride had briefly opened up. The spin on it kept it low and fast, skimming the turf, and it ran through that narrow channel and kept going, past the first centre-back's recovery step, past the second who had committed to the wrong angle and erged behind the defensive line still moving, redirecting slightly left as the backspin caught the pitch surface.
Whit Benedict had made a diagonal run forward, not because he'd anticipated the ball, but because his instinct was always to get in behind when possession was in that zone. He'd had the run on his man for two steps. The ball arrived at his stride perfectly.
One touch to settle it. Right foot, near post, underneath the goalkeeper.
1 - 0.
The training ground went quiet for a half second, the particular silence that ans everyone present has just watched sothing they weren't quite expecting and needs a mont to agree that it happened.
Then Old Jes launched himself off the fence with a sound that might have been "beautiful" or might have simply been a noise with no specific verbal content.
Daniel blinked. He turned to the analyst beside him - glasses, clipboard, had been tracking movents on a tablet. "Talk through that."
"Outside-of-foot curl, boss. Low delivery, heavy backspin. Went through Beasley's legs, the angle was designed for the gap his stride created. The spin redirected it on landing. Benedict's run t the bounce."
Daniel said nothing for a long mont.
On the pitch, Benedict was already jogging back toward the centre circle, pointing at Mateo. Ben Kehi had both hands up. Even the B Team's defensive midfielder - Beasley, who had just watched a ball travel through his legs without understanding how was staring at Mateo with an expression of genuine confusion rather than frustration, the look of soone replaying an event and failing to reconstruct the physics.
Mateo stood at the edge of the penalty area, slightly apart from the celebration. He was looking at the passing overlay, which had already reset and was plotting new lines across the pitch.
"Give him the ball!" Daniel called out. He didn't need to say it twice.
What happened over the next twelve minutes was, structurally, simple: Mateo stopped trying to understand midfield positioning and started following the overlay.
He didn't dribble. He didn't carry. When the ball ca to him, he moved it, one touch, rarely two, and always exactly where the red line told him. Ben Kehi started finding him automatically, pulling out to create space and then feeding it back in. Lloyd Angelo behind him learned in real ti to give and go, because every ti he passed to Mateo the return was instant and accurate and put him in a better position than he'd been in before.
The A Team's play accelerated. Not because of individual quality, because the ball was moving faster than the B Team could press.
The second goal ca from another outside-of-foot delivery, this one over the top, a rainbow loft from just inside the centre circle that cleared the defensive line and dropped exactly into the channel Benedict was running into. He took it in stride and slotted it low.
2 - 0.
Daniel watched the ball hit the net. Turned imdiately.
"Jes. Does this kid have representation?"
"Not that I know of."
"Find out. Because I want him signed before he leaves this building." He paused. "Today."
Old Jes, for the first ti all session, let himself smile without qualification.
User Comments
0 comments from readers